About

What this is and why it exists

The problem

Political organizations — on both sides of the aisle — have become sophisticated at collecting contact information and using it to solicit donations and mobilize supporters. This is entirely legal, and for willing supporters it's a feature, not a bug.

But a lot of people end up on these lists without intending to. You donate to one organization and suddenly hear from twenty. You register to vote and start getting texts you never asked for. The mechanisms to get off those lists exist — they're just scattered, inconsistent, and buried.

What Enough.vote does

We compile opt-out instructions for every major political contact platform and present them in one place, in plain language, with direct links. That's it.

We also generate personalized opt-out plans based on your situation — which types of contacts you want to stop, which organizations are reaching you, and how much volume you're dealing with.

Our nonpartisan principles

  • 1.
    Equal coverage, equal effort. Every feature and guide for a Democratic platform has an equivalent for the Republican side. We do not favor one party's platforms over the other in depth, accuracy, or prominence.
  • 2.
    Privacy by design. We never store your email address, phone number, or any personal contact information. Opt-out templates are generated in your browser and go directly to the organization — not through us.
  • 3.
    Neutral language. We don't call political emails "spam." We don't imply campaigns are doing something wrong — they're usually following the rules. We help people who aren't willing supporters opt out cleanly.
  • 4.
    No partisan funding. This site accepts no advertising and no funding from campaigns, PACs, or party committees on either side.
  • 5.
    Functional opt-out first. We only include steps that actually work. If an opt-out method is unreliable, we say so.

A note on campaigns' rights

Political campaigns and organizations have a legal right to contact willing supporters. The First Amendment protects political speech broadly, and federal law (by design) does not require campaigns to include unsubscribe links or honor opt-out requests the way commercial emails must.

We acknowledge this. Our goal is not to hamper political organizing — it's to help the many people who end up on contact lists without intending to get off them cleanly and efficiently. Better-quality lists are good for campaigns too: higher engagement, lower unsubscribe rates, and fewer people who feel pestered.

Legal notice

The information on this site is general guidance, not legal advice. Opt-out URLs and procedures change over time; we aim to keep them current but cannot guarantee accuracy. If you believe a sender is violating TCPA or other applicable law, consult a qualified attorney or file a complaint with the FCC or your state attorney general.